The Sl1 wyif on the uneven rows are in fact German short-row Double Stitches in the centre. The Sl1 wyif on the even rows are the decorative chain selvedge stitch. The tail is on the left at the even (RS) rows. The short-row point is formed from the left. The eyelets [yo, k1] increases are now aligned within the row that absorbs the double stitches. I'm knitting it in left-over cotton, white, with needles 3 mm. The [k2tog tbl] forms …
The Sl1 wyif on the uneven rows are in fact German short-row Double Stitches in the centre. The Sl1 wyif on the even rows are the decorative chain selvedge stitch. The tail is on the left at the even (RS) rows. The short-row point is formed from the left. The eyelets [yo, k1] increases are now aligned within the row that absorbs the double stitches. I'm knitting it in left-over cotton, white, with needles 3 mm. The [k2tog tbl] forms a good bottom for the yo's in the next row. Note for next variation: it would be more logical to have 1 YO between 2 k2tog-s, but this means the stitch counts diminishes by 1 stitch for every set -- this can be compensated at the end of the set with extra yo's...
Shown with a cast-on count of 14 stitches.